Early in December 1940, the Gneisenau and Scharnhorst went to Kiel to prepare for a breakout into the North Atlantic.

On 28 December 1940, in company with Gneisenau, an attempt was made to break out into the Atlantic for commerce-raiding but storm damage forced the postponement of the operation and a return to Germany. The Gneisenau returned to Kiel and the Scharnhorst to Gotenhafen (Gdynia) where it remained until 19 January 1941.

On 22 January 1941 Scharnhorst and Gneisenau sailed from Kiel on a second attempt to embark on the Atlantic anti-convoy operation codenamed "Berlin". The Commander-in-Chief of the German operation was Admiral Günther Lütjens and his flagship was Gneisenau.

Photo: Taken from the bridge of the Scharnhorst. Ahead of the Scharnhorst her sistership Gneisenau can be seen.

Although every effort had been made to enforce secrecy, the two ships were spotted by a British agent as they steamed through the Great Belt that separates Zealand from the mainland of Denmark. The report was radioed to the Admiralty in London. Admiral John Tovey put to sea with three battleships, eight cruisers and eleven destroyers, hoping to meet Scharnhorst and Gneisenau at a point somewhere south of Iceland.

The British assumpted that the German task force would make the way into the Atlantic through the Iceland-Faroe passage. This was also what Admiral Günther Lütjens originally had planned. But then the German task force sighted two British cruisers. Admiral Lütjens changed course and headed for the Denmark Strait instead of using the originally planned Iceland-Faroe passage.

One of the two British cruisers, HMS Naiad, had also seen a glimpse of the German ships but did not make any attempt to shadow them. Admiral Tovey concluded that the sighting had been an illusion and went back to Scapa Flow with his force.

The German battleships met up with the tanker Adria on 30 January and refuelled which due to bad weather wasn't completed until 2 February. Both ships took on about 3.400 tons of fuel.

Immediately after having refuelled the German battleships began their journey through the Denmark Strait. A tragic incident happened when a seaman named Liske fell overboard from the Gneisenau and was never found again. At dawn on 4 February, the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau steamed out into the Atlantic.

On 5 February Scharnhorst and Gneisenau shipped about 1.500 tons of fuel from the tanker Schlettstadt. The refuelling was completed on 6 February.

There was a choice of two killing-grounds. One lay to the north where the convoys (designated HX and SC) crossed the Atlantic between Canada and Britain. The other (designated SL and OG) was between Britain, Gibraltar and Freetown on the west coast of Africa. Admiral Lütjens decided to concentrate on the route between Canada and Britain for a start.

Photo: The Scharnhorst photographed from sistership, Gneisenau, off New-foundland. In the foreground a look-out on the Gneisenau can be seen.

The German intelligence had reported that a convoy, HX-106 had left Halifax on 31 January and was now on a north-easterly course.

The convoy, HX-106, was sighted on 9 February at 08:30. At 09:47 the range was established to be about 28 kilometers. The Germans discovered that the convoy's escort contained at least one battleship. 11 minutes later the Germans identified the battleship to be HMS Ramilies. Admiral Lütjens called off the German action when he heard about the presence of the British battleship.

Admiral Lütjens was certain that the British had seen the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau and was most unhappy about the situation as it would make it difficult to achieve success with the opration, not to mention the risk that it would lead to a confrontation with large British warships as Royal Navy would look for them.

Luckily for the Germans the British had sighted only one ship and the lookouts had mistakenly identified her for the heavy cruiser Admiral Hipper. A reason for the misidentification most likely was due to the fact that the British knew that Admiral Hipper was at sea while, since Admiral Tovey had discounted the report from HMS Naiad, they believed the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau still was in habour in Germany.

On 15 February Scharnhorst and Gneisenau refuelled from the tankers Esso Hamburg and Schlettstadt.

Photo: The Scharnhorst during Operation "Berlin".

The German task force resumed patrol on 17 February. Admiral Lütjens hoped to meet up with convoy HX-111 which was eastbound. After two days of fruitless searching the Germans gave up and headed westwards. It seemed as if the Atlantic in its immensity had become barren of ships.

On 22 February the Gneisenau's lookouts reported a promising feather of smoke on the horizon. Immediately, the men went to their action stations, and the two ships put on speed to intercept. As the convoy came into closer range, the picture turned out to be disappointing. The vessels were not fat with food and war materials for Britain. They were returning to the United States. They were hardly worth the trouble of an attack.

But, as Admiral Lütjens quickly realized, he had no alternative. As soon as the convoy noticed the lean grey hulls of the battleships, with their towering super structures, the ships began to scatter. Simultaneously, the air became alive with radio signals. Scharnhorst and Gneisenau had undoubtedly been identified. When the first warning shots were fired, the captains of the merchant vessels seemed to pay no attention. They maintained their courses and the chatter on the wavelengths increased. It was now almost 11:00 and Admiral Lütjens decided it was time to exercise his guns in anger.

A passenger-cargo ship of 5.483 grt. named the Harlesden was known to be about fifty miles away. Something had to be done about her, if only to put her wireless out of action. The crew of one of Gneisenau's seaplanes was given the task. When, about an hour later, the aircraft returned, the pilot reported that he had destroyed Harlesden's W/T aerial. He had, however, been subjected to machine gun fire. But the freighter's time was running out. She was picked up on the radar screens, pursued, and, at 23:08, sunk.

Within the last twelve hours, Gneisenau and Scharnhorst had sunk 5 ships totalling 25.431 gros registered tons. But, since the firing took place at very long range, the cost in ammunition was high. That night, Admiral Lütjens used his radio for the first time since 8 February. He reported his success and ordered the tankers Schlettstadt and Esso Hamburg to meet him at a point near the Azores.

When the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau met up with the tankers Ermland and Friedrich Breme on 26 February, 180 captives were put on board Ermland. They had been taken during the attack on 22 February which produced only eleven casualties among the merchant seamen. The refuelling was completed at 07:00 on 28 February.

By March 1941, the two ships had steamed 11.000 nautical miles, half the distance round the world. Admiral Lütjens used the occasion to tell his men: "I take this opportunity of expressing my complete satisfaction with the performance of the personnel, and especially the engine-room ratings". Those on board Scharnhorst were particularly entitled to praise, for they had been kept hard at work throughout the trip. The trouble came from the superheated boilers. They were of an advanced design - too advanced, possibly, for the steel tubes were not able to withstand such very high temperatures. Gneisenau appears to have been more fortunate in this respect.

Scharnhorst and Gneisenau were now threatening the convoy route from Freetown to Britain. On 3 March they reached the vicinity of the Cape Verde Islands. On the 5 March one of Scharnhorst's aircraft went missing for four hours. It was eventually discovered riding on the water, having run out of fuel.

The Scharnhorst and Gneisenau met U-124 on 6 March and the crew on both ships saluted.

Photo: The Scharnhorst, on 6 March 1941, seen from the German submarine U-124 in the Atlantic during Operation "Berlin".

Scharnhorst and Gneisenau were now steaming up and down a line between the Cape Verde Islands and the coast of Africa, cutting their speed to 12 knots to conserve fuel.

On 7 March at 09:20 hours a lookout in Scharnhorst's foretop noticed a mast on the horizon. A closer examination showed that it was the mainmast of a battleship which soon was identifued as HMS Malaya. Where there was a battleship, it was reasonable to assume that a convoy could not be far away. Gneisenau worked up speed in readiness for a little cautious reconnaissance and two hours later her lookouts picked up the masts of twelve steamers travelling due south. The Scharnhorst and Gneisenau had orders to avoid engagement with enemy capital ships and decided not the attack the convoy due to the presence of HMS Malaya.

Instead the German ships shadowed the convoy to lead German submarines to the area to attack the convoy. At 01:42 on 8 March U-124 picked up the convoy and an hour later U-105 did likewise. During the next fifteen minutes, U-124 sank five ships in the centre column, and U-105 accounted for a vessel of 10,000 tons.

The Scharnhorst and Gneisenau set off for yet another meeting with the tankers Ermland and Uckermark. On 9 March on their way to the rendezvous, Scharnhorst, almost casually, sank a Greek freighter Marathon (6.352 grt.). She was carrying coal to Alexandria.

On 11 March Scharnhorst and Gneisenau met up with the supply ships Uckermark and Ermland (previously named Altmark) to refuel and take on board more supplies. Uckermark and Ermland would join Scharnhorst and Gneisenau from now on and help search for victims. They were to operate in the western part of the convoy route, between 39°N and 46°W, steaming abreast with an interval of 56 kilometers (30 sea miles) between each ship. Given reasonable visibility, they should be able to scan a distance of about 220 kilometers (120 sea miles). The order of the line was the tanker Uckermark, Gneisenau, Scharnhorst, and the tanker Ermland. Of their first victims, four were detected by Uckermark and two by Scharnhorst.

At 21:00 on 11 March a long signal from Navy Group West arrived to Admiral Lütjens. As from 18 March, Scharnhorst and Gneisenau were to cease operating against Halifax convoys. Admiral Scheer and Admiral Hipper were due to sail into the North Atlantic during the period of the new moon. According to B-Dienst (German intelligence) a force made up of the battlecruiser Repulse, the aircraft carrier Furious and two destroyers had already left Gibraltar on a westerly course. The two battleships were required to act as a diversion while Admiral Hipper and Admiral Scheer negotiated the Iceland passage. The best way in which they could do it would be to make for Brest in France. But this was not the end of it. By the last week of April, Bismarck and Prinz Eugen would be ready for service, and Scharnhorst and Gneisenau would be needed for a new operation.

The road to Brest was by way of the North Atlantic and the FIX convoy route. The ships completed refuelling on 12 March.

15 March the German force (Uckermark) sighted several tankers steaming without escort. The killing could begin again.

The action was brief and virtually bloodless. Gneisenau captured the Norwegian tanker Bianca (5.688 grt.) at 10:20, British tanker San Casimiro (8.046 tons) at 13:40 and Norwegian tanker Polykarb (6.405 grt.) at 17:50. Prize crews were put on board with orders to sail for Bordeaux. In fact, only one (Polykarb) reached her destination. On passage, Bianca and San Casimiro encountered HMS Renown. 46 British prisoners were released, and the German sailors were taken into captivity. But, before leaving the tankers, they managed to scuttle them.

In addition to the three prizes, Gneisenau sank the British tanker Simnia (6.197 grt.). Scharnhorst sank the British tankers Athelfoam (6.554 grt.) and British Strength (7.139 grt.).

At 01.00 hours on 16 March, Uckermark and Ermland signalled that they had sighted the silhouettes of merchant vessels against the night sky. At dawn, it became clear that the fleet had steamed right into the middle of the convoy.

The Gneisenau sank the British passenger-cargo ship Rio Dorado (4.507 grt.) at 04:28, the British cargo ship Empire Industry (3.648 grt.) at 08:55, the Norwegian passenger-cargo ship Granli (1.577 grt.) at 10:22, the French passenger-cargo ship Myson (4.564 grt.) at 13:25 and the British passenger-cargo ship Royal Crown (4.364 grt.) at 15:50.

Photo: Crewmembers of one of the engaged merchant ships during Operation "Berlin" is taken on board the Scharnhorst.

In every community, there is the odd man out; in every battle, the hero who makes the last desperate stand. In this cluster of harmless merchant ships there was a Danish firebrand named Chilean Reefer.

Chilean Reefer registered no more than 1,831 gross registered tons. The moment the German giants were sighted, her captain sent off an accurate report of his position. He made smoke and actually had the temerity to return Gneisenau's fire with his small gun. The Gneisenau's commanding officer, Captain Fein, was perplexed. The tiny merchant ship's defiance was beyond his experience. Did this show of force mean that she was a carefully disguised armed cruiser? Could she be scouting for a force of warships? Might she, and this was the more immediate problem, be armed with torpedoes? Prudently, he edged his ship away to a safer distance, and then let fly with his 11-inch guns. The sea was so large and Chilean Reefer so small, that it took 73 rounds (more than the total expended on any other single target during the cruise) to send the little freighter to her death in a curtain of flame.

Lutjens's concern was as great as Captain Fein's. The possibility that Chilean Reefer might be a scout was supported by a blip on the radar screen, indicating an approaching ship at a range of 20,000 yards. Fifteen minutes later, the form of HMS Rodney bulked huge on the horizon. When she flashed a challenge, Captain Fein replied with the call sign of the British cruiser, HMS Emerald. Understandably, the people in Rodney were perplexed. Emerald had been commissioned in 1920. She registered 7,550 tons and had three smokestacks. She could not, under any circumstances, be mistaken for Gneisenau. The question "What ship?" was repeated, but Captain Fein had no intention of becoming involved in a conversation. His battleship was now working up to 32 knots, and heading away to the south as fast as possible. The last view was of the dying flames of Chilean Reefer joined in a pattern of illumination by the battleship's searchlights. HMS Rodney was, presumably, picking up the little merchantman's survivors.

On 18 March the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau refuelled once more from the supply ships Uckermark and Ermland. Also 200 prisoners was transferred to the supply ships.

Early in the morning of 19 March, Scharnhorst and Gneisenau fell in one behind the other and, at a speed of 23 knots, set course for Brest.

For the moment, Lütjens's problem was that of reaching the French port. He knew that HMS Malaya was in the vicinity of the Cape Verde Islands, and that the British Gibraltar based "Force H" was somewhere at sea. Beyond this, even B-Dienst (German intelligence) had little to offer in the way of information. The best that Lütjens could hope to do was to make the final, and most dangerous, stage of the journey by dark. He planned to reach the approaches to Brest at dawn on the 22nd.

If Lutjens was uncertain about the disposition of British ships, the Royal Navy was equally unsure as to the whereabouts of Scharnhorst and Gneisenau. After the sighting of Gneisenau by Rodney on 16 March, there was no news until the 20th, when an aircraft from Force H's Ark Royal caught a glimpse of them. Lütjens altered course to the north, and the ships presently overtook Polykarb, which was labouring on towards the Gironde with her prize crew.

An air escort was due to fly out and meet the two battleships at noon on 21 March, but the day began with fog. It was not until 16:30 that visibility had improved sufficiently for three He-115's to take off. At 19:00 the torpedo boats Iltis and Jaguar arrived from Brest to act as an anti-submarine escort.

The rest of the voyage was without incident. At 03:00 on 22 March, the two ships were met by destroyers from the flotilla stationed at Brest. At 07:00 hours the entrance to the port loomed in sight. Two days later, Uckermark and Ermland docked at La Pallice, an outer port of La Rochelle, which had been constructed to accommodate the larger, ocean-going passenger liners.

The cruise of 17,800 miles in sixty days created a record for German capital ships.

The voyage was over. Scharnhorst was now berthed alongside the Quai de la Ninon at Brest, where once the famous French battleship Dunkerque had lain. Gneisenau, in need of a few minor repairs, was installed in Number 8 dry dock. As for Admiral Lütjens, he was packing his bags before returning to Germany for a new assignment. In six weeks' time, he would once more be worrying about the problems of penetrating the Denmark Strait. Bismarck and Prinz Eugen were almost ready for action, and he had been appointed Fleet Commander.

Dimensions are given in feet-inches. Length is overall length except for those marked with an asterisk, which indicates registered length. Since each country has its own system of registering length, it’s not as useful a statistic. You’ll also see an asterisk for Granli’s draft; in fact, it is not Granli’s draft but her registered depth.